You may have heard trainers in your workout class or through your computer screen (because hello, home workouts!) tell you to activate your glutes before picking up the weights. Why is that important, though? We tapped Charlee Atkins, CSCS, founder of Le Sweat, and James Shapiro, NASM-certified personal trainer and owner of Primal Power Fitness, for some answers.

Activating Your Glutes Helps You Warm Up and Perform Moves Properly

Activating your glutes is basically a wake-up call to your muscles. Charlee explained, "Every workout should begin with activation and mobility drills that will mimic or use the muscles in patterns that will be the focus of your strength-training session. Activations are used to 'prime,' or 'prep' the body for a load." It's kind of like warming the car up in the winter, she told POPSUGAR. Some trainers say glute activation helps with something called "dormant butt syndrome," when your glutes are essentially asleep or "turned off" after sitting for extended periods of time. Charlee stated that while activation exercises definitely warm up your glutes, "often, trainers tell their clients that their client's glutes aren't firing, but if that were true, then you wouldn't be able to stand up."

James said it's important to fire up your glutes before any kind of strength workout because of the prime role they play in many multi-joint movements. "Whether you're doing squats, deadlifts, cleans, jerks, overhead pressing, or even benching, you should warm up and activate your glutes," he said, explaining that one of the glute muscles' main functions is the extension of the hips, which we can see in most lower-body movements. In upper-body motions, the glutes need to be activated as well to make sure the kinetic chain is working. The kinetic chain, he said, is the notion that an entire sequence or chain of muscles serve a role in movement.

"When performing compound motions that are complex, even though some muscles work to move the weight or resistance around, others are firing simply to stabilize your body in motion," James explained. "In a standing overhead press motion, even though the shoulders, triceps, and deltoids are working hard to push the weight, the glutes should be squeezing alongside your core to enable less stress on your low back." So, he said, if your glutes aren't activated in multi-joint movements like the bench press or overhead press, you could be using more of your lower back than you should.

Activating Your Glutes Helps You Get the Most Out of Your Booty Workouts Specifically

As a reminder, adding weights into your lower-body workout is essential if you want to truly see your glutes grow (aside from other things like proper nutrition and recovery). Doing glute activation exercises before you lift weights can aid in getting "maximal booty pump results," Charlee said. "By doing glute activation exercises, we can help 'turn-on' or 'remind' the body how to recruit more from the entire glute muscle group: the glute maximus, glute medius, and glute minimus." Charlee also noted that banded glute activation exercises can be used for rehabilitation purposes in physical therapy since they use minimal resistance and the bands control the amount of movement allowed.

How to Activate Your Glutes Before a Workout

Though you can't really overactivate your glutes, James said you should be mindful of how much time you're spending doing this kind of warmup. If your goal for a workout is to squat for strength or perform power cleans, activating your glutes for too long might make that goal harder to achieve.

Both trainers named some bodyweight and banded exercises that activate the glutes. They include:

Leg swings

Glute bridge

Reverse lunge

Banded hip thruster

Lateral band walks

Banded seated abduction

Ahead, check out how to do each of these moves for glute activation. These are, of course, only a few examples. Here are some more to try.